A thoughtful way into this question is to distinguish what redemption heals decisively from what it begins to heal progressively. The apparent tension dissolves once we stop treating “the removal of original sin” as equivalent to the immediate completion of moral transformation.
Original sin as condition, not merely behavior
In classical Christian thought, original sin is not simply a catalogue of bad inclinations but a condition of alienation—a rupture in right relationship with God that distorts perception, desire, and trust. At redemption, that condition is genuinely addressed. The believer is reconciled, adopted, and reoriented toward God. Guilt is removed; condemnation is lifted; the status of estrangement is ended.
Yet removal of original sin in this sense does not imply the erasure of every internal consequence that developed under its reign. A forgiven disease is not the same as a healed nervous system.
The persistence of disordered patterns
Sin after redemption does not arise from a remaining “taint” in the juridical sense, but from habituated distortions—patterns of thought, affect, and action that were learned and reinforced prior to, and even after, conversion. Scripture regularly names this reality as “the flesh,” not as a substance but as a mode of life shaped by fear, scarcity, and self-protection.
Redemption reorients the self at its center, but it does not instantly dismantle the neurological, psychological, and relational grooves carved over years. These patterns can continue to operate even when the heart’s fundamental allegiance has changed. One might say the root has been healed, but the soil still bears weeds.
Divided consciousness rather than divided loyalty
The Christian who sins is not best understood as choosing rebellion over obedience, but as acting from partial integration. The mind knows one thing, the embodied self reflexively does another. Paul’s language in Romans 7 is not a denial of redemption but a phenomenology of it: the self awakened to God now perceives, often painfully, the mismatch between intention and enactment.
This is not hypocrisy; it is exposure.
Salvation as inaugurated, not exhausted
The New Testament consistently frames salvation as both accomplished and unfolding. Justification is decisive; sanctification is participatory. Redemption restores communion with God, but the restoration of the person into full coherence—emotionally, relationally, somatically—takes time and cooperation with grace.
If sin were impossible after redemption, growth would be unnecessary, repentance obsolete, and perseverance meaningless. The Christian life would collapse into a single moment rather than a lived transformation.
Grace does not bypass embodiment
Finally, grace does not annihilate the human condition; it heals it from within. Christians continue to live in bodies marked by stress responses, memory, trauma, and social formation. Sin can emerge not from defiance but from exhaustion, fear, or misperception. Redemption does not remove vulnerability; it gives it a new horizon.
In this light, post-redemption sin is not evidence that original sin remains, but that healing is relational and temporal, not mechanical. The miracle is not that Christians never sin, but that sin no longer defines who they are—or where they are going.